Two- Three- or Four-Lap Driving Experience in Ferrari or Lamborghini at G1tour (Up to 61% Off).

Multiple Locations

In a Nutshell

Drivers slide behind the wheel of a Ferrari or Lamborghini and burn rubber around one of three tracks

The Fine Print

Promotional value expires Oct 30, 2013. Amount paid never expires.Limit 1 per person, may buy 2 additional as gifts. Limit 1 per visit. Valid only for option purchased. Reservation required; recommended book by June 30 for preferred dates. 48hr cancellation notice required. Must be 16 or older and have a valid drivers license. Must sign waiver. Subject to weather conditions. All rides will be accompanied with an instructor.Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.

G1tour

People love an adrenaline rush, which is why we play extreme sports and go bulk shopping. Go big with this Groupon.

Choose from Three Options

$229 for a two-lap driving experience in a Ferrari or Lamborghini in Mont-Tremblant (a $499 value)

$149 for a four-lap driving experience in a Ferrari or Lamborghini in Circuit Sanair (a $379 value)

$149 for a three-lap driving experience in a Ferrari or Lamborghini in Sainte-Croix (a $379 value)

Before turning drivers loose, professional driving instructors guide them through a full safety-training course. Book early for preferred dates.

G1Tour

For motor enthusiasts, few sounds rival the sheer exuberance of an Italian super car spooling up its engine as it careens down the straightaway. At G1Tour, guests can achieve this thrill by slipping into the cockpit of their choice of three iconic super cars. Two Ferraris—a 360 Modena and an F430—twist their tires with 400 and 490 horsepower respectively, with the potential to reach the exact top speed of a cheetah who is driving a Ferrari. If that's not enough muscle, drivers can watch the blood drain from their knuckles as they attempt to contain the furious 552-horsepower Lamborghini Gallardo, who's high-rev plant propels passengers from 0 to 100 km/h in less than four seconds.

Cars can swirl around the 1.4-kilometre Sanair's wide tracks and soft turns or race headlong down the ultra-long straightaways of the 2-kilometre Sainte-Croix. Drivers who take on Mont-Tremblant negotiate hairpin turns and corkscrews as they work the pedals around the course's 4.2-kilometre track.